John Bannister (Wisconsin politician) explained

John Bannister
Order:4th
Mayor of Beloit, Wisconsin
Term Start:April 1860
Term End:April 1861
Predecessor:S. J. Todd
Successor:Charles H. Parker
Office1:Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Constituency1:Rock 4th district
Term Start1:January 6, 1862
Term End1:January 5, 1863
Predecessor1:Anson W. Pope
Successor1:C. Mortimer Treat
Constituency2:Rock 2nd district
Term Start2:January 6, 1851
Term End2:January 5, 1852
Predecessor2:John R. Briggs Jr.
Successor2:John Hackett
Birth Date:8 September 1808
Birth Place:New York, U.S.
Death Place:San Diego, California, U.S.
Restingplace:Wellsville Cemetery,
Relatives:Henry S. White (nephew)

John Bannister Sr. (September 8, 1808January 3, 1888) was an American farmer, politician, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was the 4th mayor of Beloit, Wisconsin, and represented Rock County in the Wisconsin State Assembly during the 1851 and 1862 terms. Originally a Democrat, he became a Republican after that party was established in 1856.

Biography

John Bannister was born in the state of New York, lived for some time in Oneida County, New York, and came to the Wisconsin Territory about 1845, settling in Beloit.[1]

He was first elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly as a Democrat in 1850, representing Rock County's 2nd Assembly district (then comprising the towns of Beloit, Turtle, and Clinton).[2] During that legislative term, he was also one of the founing members of the Wisconsin Agricultural Society.[3]

Bannister became a Republican shortly after that party was created in 1856, and by 1859 was president of the Rock County Republican Club. In that capacity, he hosted Abraham Lincoln to give a speech in Beloit on October 1, 1859, when Lincoln was not yet a candidate for president. Bannister forgot Lincoln's name when introducing him to the crowd.[4]

The next year, Bannister was elected mayor of Beloit, running on the Republican ticket.[5] The following year, after the start of the American Civil War, he won another term in the Assembly, running as a Union Republican candidate in what was then Rock County's 4th Assembly district (the city of Beloit, and the towns of Beloit and Turtle).[1]

Personal life and family

John Bannister married Temperance Simmons in 1830; she was a daughter of Abraham Simmons of Phelps, New York. They had five children, though at least one died in childhood. Their only son, John Jr., served briefly in the 40th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment during the Civil War.[6]

Notes and References

  1. The Legislative Manual of the State of Wisconsin . 1862 . State of Wisconsin . Statistical List of the Assembly of 1862 . 83 . May 22, 2024 .
  2. The Blue Book of the State of Wisconsin . 1882 . State of Wisconsin . Annals of the Legislature . 183 . May 22, 2024 .
  3. News: State Agricultural Society . Wisconsin Express . March 20, 1851 . 3 . May 22, 2024 . .
  4. Web site: The "Illinois Orator" . Fred . Burwell. . November 29, 2012 . May 22, 2024 .
  5. News: Mayor of Beloit . Janesville Gazette . April 6, 1860 . 2 . May 22, 2024 . .
  6. Roster of Wisconsin Volunteers, War of the Rebellion, 1861 - 1865 . 2 . Office of the Adjutant General of Wisconsin . 1886 . Fortieth Regiment Infantry . 676 . May 22, 2024 .